Teenager IQ tests on 1) Muhammad Yunus and Grameen
Bank 2) Entrepreneurial Revolution and The Economist help Norman Macrae Foundation (email chris.macrae@yahoo.co.uk ) develop
these tests and supporting content for these and other curriculum of MOOCyunus.

example Grameen Energy -gshakti .Exponential rising Success Factors (eg million solar installed doubling every 3 years) -depended
on getting 1000+ engineers to live in villages -massive logistics challenge only possible once engineers empowered by
mobile phones another global village first of grameen with some financial help from Soros and knowledge support from Neville
Williams whose own self franchise never quite inspired so many village engineers but was built pre-mobile age -
Grameen Energy is the most benchmarked case of the ashden energy Oscars ...more..

USA Congress Gold Medal of Yunus please note that the first 27 minutes and 57 seconds of this video is blank - then us politicians of all stripes celebrate
yunus who is free to speak from 1 6 mins 36 seconds ; more videos from congress on this topic from 3rd quarter 2010 are at
www.grameeneconomics.comSolarE1.13.55 ; G1.14.23; PM1.16.00 EU 1.16.41 H1.17.23

The UK has invested
more than any nation in social broadcasting media but at a time when peoples around the world need world service investigative
journalism as to why low-trust top-down systems are spinning so much youth unemployment even as we could be celebrating
the freedom of a million times more collaboration technology that when man raced to the moon.

..It was UK economist Keynes that concluded economists were capable of

designing futures that people most needed or

destroying futures peoples most needed but
nothing much in between at times of great change.

http://jobscompetitions.ning.com/ join us in worldwie celebrations of youth entrepreenur competitions as a way of mobilising big society out of every
community - this method is aligned with changing the education value chain from one that traps students in loans and joblessness
to ensuring they create jobs whilst still connected to the extraordinary knowledge networks that real 21st education linksin

help search out content for pro-youth economics at our search space of Journal of Social Business at http://josbnet.ning.com/

At the moment Scotland http://www.grameenscotland.com/ is accelerating youth entrepreneurial movements in ways that can make its independence from top-down UK and top-down
EU a benchmark for all places where people want to enjoy bottom-up and collaboration economies not the too big to fail systes
that fatally conceited macroeconomists have drowned rest of UK in. For other places attempts to free themselves
from economists hired by the richest 1% to destroy the futures most community-grounded people want- join
us in cataloguing entrepreneurial revolutions at http://yunuscity.ning.com/

On 2 January 2012, PM Cameron made a commitment; to use the Olympics and celebrations marking 60 years
of the queen's reign in 2012 to return Britain to strength despite continuing economic gloom. Over the last 7 years grassroots networks such as these have been debating this timeline- see lower down for our suggestions on what to empower youth and peoples to do to co-produce
2010s as Britain's most productive decade

Getting real in 2012 about segmenting countries jobs: Germany needs to understand the advantages of being different
from the rest of Europe not force what makes it economical on others; it also needs to get real about inviting other europeean
nations to reduce their spends on defence while increasing its. UK needs to demand that those who help promote the olympics
reduce spends on ads (the least economical media and collaborate in job creating media); it also needs to take Sir Ronald
Cohen's lead in demonstrating how 100 billion dolars of charitable assets can actionably invest in youth now instead of maintain
ivory towers. Spain needs to be led by Queen Sofia's love of youth job creation not politicians cutting investments in youth;
Belgium as epicentre of the drive to http://www.entrepreneurialunion.com/ m needs to join in partnerships which involve youth in searching out which social solutions to produce in which communities;
France (with europe's portals to how microcredit and global partnering in sustainability) and scotland (with a love of nurses
and girl power and journals search to renew community through celebrating social action: service by the people for the people
) can help belgium> Moreover, the dna of entrepreneurial revolution began with these auld allies in late 18th century and
has been joyously renewed by these countries partnerships with dr yunus over the last 7 years. Austria can be an interesting
mediator of potential conflicts between all of the above

.

Recomendations after 7 years research among many thousands of entrepreneurial revolutionaries
on what Cameron could do to empower youth productivity through appropraitely staged celebrations of London's worldwide good
news (olympics, quenn elizabeth's 60th )

1) Do as many 1000 youth job brainstormings as possible - make they more fashionable to sponsor than any media a brand ahs ever ysed; get the BBC to congratulate all
who celebrate this smartest medium of 21st C

2) Host makerfaires and singforhope (and the choir) intercultural festivals all round the surrounding vicinities of the olymnpics stadium -make this frjnge
as exciting to ytoung peopel as the sporst stars. Invite sports stars who wish to adopt a millennium goal issue or a job creation
search to attend a university of stars where they can find mentors who would be happy to host them when they want some privacu on their world tours

3)
Link in every city across UK or Europe where social business incubation experiments are due to happen so that other creative
people (eg chefs) can offer to develop franchises owned by the community. Before and after the olympics do a road tour of
these centres filming a social solutions Dragons Den.

4) Ensure that London TimeOut and Whats on publications feature
the new favourite tourist sites such as Prince Charles Green palace ( the new name for the solar-empowered Clarence Palace).
When I was a child - I-Spy guides were great fun to spot london's hidden treasures- which treasures does London sport know
which are designed for and by youth productivity and community sustainability? Invite cities round the world to twin
up around project foci - which city has parallel youth productivity sites? How can their youth networks keep on cheering each
other's good enws long after the olympics has burnt its final flame?

5) have postboxes pop up everywhere that olympic
crowds swarm for mapping and reporting social solutions competition relevant to the november 2011 launch of Entrepreneurial Union and celebrating civil society regenarted by youthn all over Europe.

The University of Salford is delighted to be hosting one of the world’s most inspiring
individuals and hope you will come and join us. As you will see from the programme, you will not only have the opportunity
to hear from Muhammad Yunus, we also have a number of other guest speakers who will present ideas, solutions and case studies
on the topic of social business and transforming lives. Come along and find out how you can help to make the world a better
place.

Programme

09.30

Registration, Maxwell Hall, Peel Park Campus

10.30

Building Social Business Summit

Welcome
by Professor Martin Hall, Vice Chancellor, University of Salford

Keynote Address, Muhammad
Yunus

12.30

Break for Lunch

13.30

Building Business Case Workshops (see below)

15.00

Building Social Businesses Plenary with Professor Muhammad Yunus

16.00

Close

Please
note that the timings and content of this programme are subject to change.

Workshops

During the day, we
will be hosting a number of workshops led by successful business leaders. You will be given the opportunity to explore ideas,
solutions and case studies on the topic of social business and transforming lives. Professor Yunus will visit each of the
workshops in turn to join in with the discussions. As the workshops run concurrently please register for the workshop that
you would like to attend by clicking on one of the links below:

The teams were led through this three-day workshop by MIT Sloan faculty whose research has contributed significantly
to the academic understanding of the drivers and impact of innovation-driven entrepreneurial ecosystems and startup communities.
The program originated as a response to frequent requests of faculty to give brief talks on the subject and consult to regions
around the globe; the desire to take a deeper look at how to better examine and accelerate these entrepreneurial ecosystems
and a commitment to driving towards impact resulted in the MIT REAP program. They formed MIT REAP as part of an comprehensive
effort to engage all stakeholders in a regional strategy, putting their research into practice.

One
part of the MIT REAP curriculum is to assemble a task force of key players across the ecosystem to form a strong and defensible
strategy for building an entrepreneurial community within a given region. Having a strategy for your community follows from
the findings from Professors Scott Stern and Fiona Murray who have dedicated their careers to studying entrepreneurship and innovation. This past week in Edinburgh, MIT REAP members
were able to closely examine one cluster emerging in Scotland by touring sites across the wave energy ecosystem. In addition
to hosting many leading wave energy companies born out of Scottish universities, including Pelamis and AWS, Scotland is home to the European Marine Energy Centre (EMEC), a third-party certification center for new technologies. Scotland is geographically located in one of the five regions in
the world with consistent and strong wave and tidal activity. The region’s leadership and drive in this area now mean
that other regions are unlikely to overtake its position as wave energy leader. MIT REAP members examined the unique characteristics
of the region that enable this position and how the public and private sector actors contribute to its competitiveness.

The
MIT REAP teams also covered the hot topic of accelerators and their recent proliferation across the globe. Bill Aulet, one of the three core MIT REAP faculty members, even wrote a small write-up in Startup Communities about the MIT Founders’ Skills Accelerator which gave 10 student-entrepreneur teams up to $20K to found a company this past summer. The MIT REAP teams were aware of
accelerator’s potential to fulfill part four of the Boulder thesis: to engage the entrepreneurial stack. However, with
that awareness also came a reluctance to simply launch copy-cat accelerators with low value to entrepreneurs and other participants.
Yet the appetite remains strong for knowledge and transferable take-aways from accelerators such as TechStars, as regions
around the world continue to search for sparks to flame full-fledged startup communities.

This first cohort of regions
will complete the MIT REAP program in late 2013, coinciding with the launch of a second cohort. To learn more about becoming
an MIT REAP member or how to put your own region’s initiatives and innovation-driven entrepreneurial activity on the
map, you can visit reap.mit.edu.

About the author:Beto Juárez III is a second-year
MBA student at MIT Sloan and a Springworks scholar. In addition to helping administer the MIT REAP program, he is also writing a thesis on the formation of entrepreneurial
communities, and is the co-founder of SpokeSwap, a peer-to-peer rental marketplace.

GUk GM GEU yunusolympics.com what to viralise around london at time
of olympics so that the BBC has other good news stories that sports (as advocated by olympics star Carolina Kluft as early
as 2004); futureofbbc ; erworld.tv entrepreneurialunion.com

As we searched other movements started to emerge
out of London as having worked on their own exponential growth for collaboration entrepreneurship:Gen the green
movement of http://www.ashden.org

After
7/7 , fifty people met at the Hub in Islington - declared the biggest crisis goal of the next 7 years concerning each of them
- and committed to share peer network maps on each goal. 2102 was chosen as the deadline for engaging the BBC in what can
be its duty as the world's most ersporced social media to investigative journalise pro-youth social solutions without
any influence from politicians or corporations or any other powers that be.

What
isnt needed is BBC journalists posing as gurus in this great quest for pursposeful leadership and youth productivity. In spirit
of mediating, journalists can host Oxford Union type debates and reality tv shows that raise optimistic questioning of why
an old system that is collapsing and what will be needed so youth can take up its transformation back to sustainability. Unlike
commercial pundits, the BBC should help innovative leaders confidently proclaim there there is no answer until the people
go and start searching it. Today 90% of the most entrepreneurial (value multiplying) knowledge wasn;t connectable 20 years
ago. The educational opportunity of the net generation is the fusion of best of mass and new media inquiry. Let's iteratively
connect internet media and mass media to have positive impacts on each other rather than dumbing down ones. London's great
and good whould invite Richard Murdoch to sponsor a brainstrust on te future of good news media beginning with him declaring a peace treaty on the BBC as the
jewel in the world service crown - a public broadcaster for 7 billion peoples can make its imprint on social media now in
ways that no other ekmdia can

Prior to 7/7 the network that most raised our consciousness on the
Coming War Between Goodwill and Badwill networks was instigated by Australian medics and youth mediators who hosted the first
summit of Global Reconciliation in London 2003 keynoted by Mary Robinson and with testimonies from 50 cultures around the world on conflicts whose origins could be darwn back to London days
as epicenjtre of Empire. Fortunately, the 1843 Founder of The Economist started the mother of all Un-empire networks so the
opportunity to dialogue both humanly and economically was rebprn (out of the same meeting space that Betrand Russell used to inspire wotld citizen debates from)